Find animated examples of the 12 principles of animation by researching online. Look here to see which principle you've been assigned. Some of you have 2.
Create a new page and link it to the principle you've been assigned to.
You can create a link by highlighting the principle listed here and then linking to the internal wikipage you've created.
Make sure that on the new page you embed the video if possible. If it can't be embedded then include a link to the site where you found it.
Explain in writing how it illustrates the Principle(s) you've been assigned. Tell who the animator is and what type of animation it is also.
By now you should have read and watched the video at my wikipage called 12 Principles of Animation.
Find animated examples of the 12 principles of animation by researching online. Look here to see which principle you've been assigned. Some of you have 2.
Create a new page and link it to the principle you've been assigned to.
You can create a link by highlighting the principle listed here and then linking to the internal wikipage you've created.
Make sure that on the new page you embed the video if possible. If it can't be embedded then include a link to the site where you found it.
Explain in writing how it illustrates the Principle(s) you've been assigned. Tell who the animator is and what type of animation it is also.
Squash and stretch (Megan)
Anticipation (Chris)
Staging (Caleb)
Straight Ahead Action and Pose to Pose (Sam)
Follow Through and Overlapping Action (Ali)
Slow In and Slow Out (Billy)
Arcs (Amber)
Secondary Action (Amber)
Timing (Shelly)
Exaggeration (Chris)
Solid Drawing (Sam)
Appeal (Megan)